2008
DOI: 10.1164/rccm.200708-1151oc
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Detection of Anaerobic Bacteria in High Numbers in Sputum from Patients with Cystic Fibrosis

Abstract: A range of anaerobic species are present in large numbers in the lungs of patients with CF. If these anaerobic bacteria are contributing significantly to infection and inflammation in the CF lung, informed alterations to antibiotic treatment to target anaerobes, in addition to the primary infecting pathogens, may improve management.

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Cited by 442 publications
(431 citation statements)
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“…However, fermentative signals observed from CF samples were not likely from saliva contamination, because the characteristic gas bubble formation was only present during exacerbation and never at times of stability even though sampling procedures were identical. Oral bacteria have been detected before in the upper airways and sputum of CF patients (Tunney et al, 2008;Worlitzsch et al, 2009;Goddard et al, 2012;Willner et al, 2012), and our results indicate that they colonize lung mucus and may contribute significantly to exacerbations. However, it cannot be known whether these bacteria drive exacerbation onset or whether their growth is favored during the conditions of an exacerbating CF lung.…”
Section: Sources Of the Fermentative Responsesupporting
confidence: 57%
“…However, fermentative signals observed from CF samples were not likely from saliva contamination, because the characteristic gas bubble formation was only present during exacerbation and never at times of stability even though sampling procedures were identical. Oral bacteria have been detected before in the upper airways and sputum of CF patients (Tunney et al, 2008;Worlitzsch et al, 2009;Goddard et al, 2012;Willner et al, 2012), and our results indicate that they colonize lung mucus and may contribute significantly to exacerbations. However, it cannot be known whether these bacteria drive exacerbation onset or whether their growth is favored during the conditions of an exacerbating CF lung.…”
Section: Sources Of the Fermentative Responsesupporting
confidence: 57%
“…Conventional bacterial culture in aerobic conditions allows isolation of a limited number of organisms. Extended culture methods identify a much wider range of bacteria, which include more difficult to culture bacteria, such as anaerobic bacteria (4,15,23). At present, there is no readily available methodology to identify all of these organisms in a way that makes this information valuable for clinical treatment (77).…”
Section: Treating Multiple Infectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, many bacteria form biofilms in the CF lung that make their eradication difficult (3). In addition, it has also become clear that only a small fraction of the microbes present in the CF airway are being identified with routine laboratory techniques (4,5), and both extended culture methods and molecular techniques have identified organisms that previously were not routinely cultured (6). Traditional antibiotic susceptibility testing performed on planktonic bacteria has been found to be of limited clinical use in chronic airway infection as most bacteria in the CF lung exist in biofilms (7).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notably, obligately anaerobic taxa have gained recent attention for their abundance in expectorated sputum, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and explanted lungs [5,27,28,[32][33][34]. A role for these organisms in CF disease has not yet been established; however, some have been characterized for their ability to degrade and ferment salivary mucins in the oral cavity [21,23,35].…”
Section: Saliva-derived Mucin-fermenting Bacteria Support the Growth mentioning
confidence: 99%